Riki Rafner
415.597.6712
rrafner@commonwealthclub.org
(San Francisco, CA, Feb. 13, 2014) — Famed child star, diplomat, and former president of The Commonwealth Club, Ambassador Shirley Temple Black passed away of natural causes in her Woodside home at age 85. After she married businessman Charles Black and they settled in Woodside, she joined The Commonwealth Club in 1971, the first year women were admitted to membership. After her first stint as an American diplomat, as ambassador to Ghana, Ambassador Black was elected president of The Commonwealth Club in 1984, one of the first women to ever hold this position. In 1984, this position was the chief volunteer leader at the Club, analogous today to being chair of the Club’s Board of Governors.
Her celebrity brought the Club greater attention and a long list of distinguished speakers that year, including Henry Kissinger, Prince Bandar bin Sultan of Saudi Arabia, French President Francois Mitterand, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, Vice President George H. W. Bush, and National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane.
She was also an active and engaged board leader. Concerned at competition between the two organizations, she brokered a written “treaty” between the Club and the World Affairs Council to co-host visiting heads of state, an agreement that remains in force today.
Ambassador Black’s most central goal as the Club’s president, publicly announced as her one-year term began in 1984, was to obtain a building for The Commonwealth Club where many of its public forums could take place. She was determined that the Club’s eight decades of paying rent come to an end. She appointed the Club’s first formal building committee, asking friends like Stephen Bechtel, Jr., and others she met, including San Francisco businessmen Joe Perelli and Joe Epstein, to serve on the committee or to chair it. Epstein said, “If I hadn’t happened to sit next to her at a dinner, she would not have recruited me for the building committee and I would not have become involved at the Club.” Both men became volunteer leaders at the Club themselves, serving terms as president later on.
At Ambassador Black’s initiative, the Building Committee looked at several buildings as potential homes for the Club. But the committee reluctantly abandoned the search after three years, after pricing San Francisco real estate and concluding that the Club did not have enough funds or fundraising capability to acquire a building.
In 2011 the Club returned to the strategy set out by Ambassador Black, resuming the search for real estate, this time accompanied by a capital fundraising drive. In October of 2012 the Club had raised enough funds to purchase a prime site at 110 The Embarcadero on San Francisco’s waterfront. The Club will soon break ground on this long-desired building project.
Club leaders were surprised and humbled to learn on the morning after Ambassador Black’s death that she had designated the Club’s building project as a recipient of donations in her memory. According to Club President and CEO Gloria Duffy, “this completes the cycle, bringing Ambassador Black’s dream for the Club finally to reality. We are enormously humbled and grateful to her and to her family.”
To view a video tribute by the Club for Ambassador Black, visit http://vimeo.com/86626275
People looking to make a gift in Ambassador Black’s memory can go to https://support.commonwealthclub.org/donate and select “Shirley Temple Black” in the Tribute Information field at the bottom of the page, or they can contact Kimberly Maas, VP of development, at 415-597-6726 or kmaas@commonwealthclub.org.
Founded in 1903, The Commonwealth Club of California is the nation’s largest and oldest public affairs forum, with more than 20,000 members. Based in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, the Club hosts events around the Bay Area. The Club organizes over 400 speeches, debates and discussions each year on issues of regional, national and international significance. About a million people hear The Commonwealth Club’s weekly radio broadcasts on more than 230 stations across the country. It is the longest-running radio program in the U.S., on the air since 1924. The Club also posts videos of its programs on the Internet, podcasts its programs, and publishes The Commonwealth magazine. For the past eleven decades, The Club has fostered free speech and civic dialogue on wide-ranging topics, addressing key issues in society, culture, politics, the economy and more. For more information, visit www.commonwealthclub.org
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